As with much of his music, the theme of songs dealing with darker topics and real-life incidents continues on this album. Lakeman describes "I'll Haunt You" (written with
Steve Knightley) as being 'probably the darkest material either of us [sic] have ever written'. There is also a strong, though not exclusive, theme of songs about seafaring and the coast, again continuing a trend from much of his earlier material. "Solomon Browne" for example, another key track, is about the
Penlee lifeboat disaster in 1981 in which 16 people lost their lives. In an interview for fRoots magazine in March 2008, Lakeman gave more information on some of the tracks: "Feather in a Storm" is based on the story of the Danish pirate
John Coppinger who, legend has it, planted false beacons on coastal rocks to lure ships to disaster while his gang lay in wait to salvage the booty. "The Hurlers" is about a
Bodmin legend about a local priest turning local men into stone having caught them playing
hurling, when they should have been in church. "Blood Red Sky" is a modern retelling of the old English ballad of
Reynardine. Not all the tracks are so dark. Of "Crimson Dawn" Lakeman is quoted as saying, "It's about a guy who goes out on a lifeboat and among the ones he saves is a beautiful woman, but her hair gets tangled up in the lifeboat rigging. He chops her hair off with an axe and they end up getting married and live happily ever after. That's a nice story, isn't it?". ==References==